A Thousand Words: Emergence - From Simple Lessons Arise Unexpected Results
September 15th, 2009by Richard Cox
TULSA, OK-
The first memory I have of my father is my earliest image of anything, a thunderous voice demanding I finish some long-forgotten meal. I was still in a high chair then, and the world was binary, black and white, yes or no. Mostly no. If you were uncertain about whether a particular action was permissible, you didn’t have to wait long to find out. The loud voice made the world exceedingly simple.
But while I often feared the consequences of my questionable behavior, I was never afraid of my father. To be honest I don’t know how he pulled that off. Maybe the secret is I’ve always known where I stood with him. I knew generally what was right and what was wrong, and I knew I would always be treated fairly. I also knew my father loved me.
Like if I was sick to my stomach at three in the morning, crouched over a toilet on the other side of the house, somehow he was there with a cool washcloth on my forehead. Or when I wrecked my bike and cut myself so badly I still have the scars, there he was washing my wounds, so proud of me for not crying. Or the way he constantly reminded me how he never earned the grades in school I brought home with ease. I wasn’t so sure about that, since I believed my father to be the smartest man in the world, but I appreciated him saying it anyway.
He was raised on the red, desolate plains of north Texas. In small towns like his, there was nothing to do and everything to do. He grew up hunting and fishing and working. He spent several summers on a harvest, twelve hours a day of backbreaking labor under a sweltering sun. After high school he made a stab at college but not a very serious one. He knew his own strengths and where he might find success, and it wasn’t between the covers of a textbook.
So he married my mother, took a job for a treating company, and began a nearly forty-year, zig-zag journey through the oilfields of the central United States. He drove a treating truck, sold oilfield chemicals, took jobs in places other sales reps wanted no part of. Together with my mother he saved our family from repeating the modest upbringing of their rural youth.
To my brother, sister, and me, the stories of my parents’ gritty childhoods were mythological, something you might read in a Larry McMurtry novel. In fact McMurtry himself grew up less than fifteen miles from my mother’s house…and yet I had no idea there was a Pulitzer prize-winning novelist nearby until almost ten years after he won the award.
Why? Because though my father instilled core values that will always be part of me, and though he taught me many important things, he reads sparingly. If he read any novels at all during my nineteen years at home, I never saw them. I, on the other hand, was an insatiable reader. In my teens I burned through books like Guy Montag in Fahrenheit 451.
Considering the amount of hours my father put in at work, that his wife and three children were waiting to pounce when he walked through the front door every evening, he probably had little time to read. More importantly, literature has never been part of his world. He spent his youth outdoors, on his feet, and can barely sit still long enough to watch a film, let alone read a novel.
But even though literature wasn’t necessarily important to him, he never tried to separate me from it. I suppose he might have been frustrated to see me sprawled across my bed on sunny summer days, engrossed in a book when I could have been outdoors, but that didn’t stop him from purchasing me a typewriter for Christmas when I was 18. I think he first asked if I wanted a shotgun, and I would have been happy with one for sure, but he knew what I really wanted. And though he never asked what sort of projects I was working on, the Christmas gift was an unspoken message of support I’ve never forgotten.
In 1984 my mother was diagnosed with Primary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis. The course of her disease changed the course of my father’s life. He intentionally altered his upward-moving career path to make things easier on her. We lived closer to family, we moved to climates kinder to the disease. Eventually he arranged to work from home so he could he spend more time with her.
Retired now, my father is very nearly a scratch golfer, as well as an accomplished hunter and fisherman, but he’s never left my mother’s side. The two of them have changed their diets (based on a book, no less) as a possible way to slow the progression of her MS. And believe it when I say that watching my conservative, hard-nosed father wander through the aisles of a whole foods store looking for gluten-free products was one of the most surreal and impressive experiences of my life.
Though he never recommended a novel to me, or had any idea how to land a literary agent, my father was as instrumental as anyone in my quest to become a published novelist. Maybe he would have preferred for me to study petroleum engineering or even medicine, but the most important lesson the elder Richard Cox ever taught me is this: Don’t give up. As many times as I was rejected as a young novelist, as inept and uneducated as I felt trying to break into the world of publishing, I never once considered quitting. Fully aware of my modest storytelling and compositional skills, I worked hard to improve them, and though I’ve now published two novels, I still have a long way to go.
But I would never had made it this far without him.
So Dad, I thank you. And on behalf of my brother and sister, we thank you. For making sacrifices on our behalf, for standing beside our mother while she has fought a terrifying disease, for adapting your own strongly-held views to our divergent cultural and political beliefs, we all thank you. If I ever have a child, I will pass along your lessons to him or her with pride.
However…if my son requires assistance on how to knock down a mourning dove with his .410 shotgun, I might have to ask you to lend a hand. I’ve never been as good a shot as you.
But I could use another lesson.
-R























I hope you send this to him.
I think he’ll see it.
You can tell it’s deadline day for the 1000-word pieces!
For mine, I was going to write about my dad, and I began a piece that I ultimately scrapped because I couldn’t find a way to say what I wanted. So it went every time I tried to write about any member of my family.
My dad was raised in poverty in rural Virginia, and he worked hard–and then some–to better his lot. I was a bookworm, like you, and even now, when I go home, I’ll often sit up late to read, discovered by my dad when he wakes, as he does constantly through the night. I know he thinks it’s weird, but I also know he’s proud that I’m a writer. He even tried to get me to collaborate with him on a screenplay once. I told him his proposed story had a lot of holes, and he said, “Well, fine, I’ll find somebody else to work on it with me, then.” Hollywood attitude from my dad–who’d have thunk?
He never bought me a typewriter, but a few months ago, when my computer was down and I was in an especially fraught financial state, he uncomplainingly sent me a check. He asked me to send him a copy of my novel, and I suppose I will eventually, but I know he’s going to find it shocking, just as I also know he’ll carry it with him everywhere and display it to anyone with a working set of eyes.
As for shotguns–since I suppose I’m addressing perceived overlap between your piece and the one I never wrote–my dad never asked if I wanted a shotgun; he went ahead and bought me one. And it’s a beaut, though I only took it hunting once, which I regret. I’ve never been able to adequately describe the pleasure of bird hunting to those who reflexively disapprove.
Here’s to many more trips to whole-food stores with the hope that they do for a fact halt your mother’s MS. And apologies for apparently having attempted a 1000-word piece about my dad on the comment board for yours.
Thanks for sharing your story…it sounds like we’ve had some similar experiences. And thanks for the encouragement about my mom. She would appreciate it.
My brother and I went pheasant hunting with my dad last year and we couldn’t hit anything. I’m hoping next time it’ll be a bit different.
lovely. just lovely.
Hi Zoe. Thank you.
So sweet.
Thanks.
As a Dad-to-be, I found this touching, sweet, and wonderful.
Congratulations on being a Dad-to-be. And thank you.
Yeah, Richard, that’s a great piece. Well done, and it brought back memories. I can imagine your Dad holding those novels and looking at them. My boy wrote these.
I had one of those Dads, too. He was technically a businessman, but his business was a commercial laundry and dry cleaning plant, and he did most of the maintenance himself. He never went to college. We did a lot of bird hunting together, and I know it pleased him that I was good at it. He supported me, his bookish kid, completely. But at the same time, he kept me off some of his turf, even though I wanted to be there. I kept asking him to teach me to weld, and he kept making excuses not to.
At one point he said what I’ve always thought was the saddest thing he ever said: “Son, if you turn out like me I’ll be sorry.” I knew what he meant, and I knew he was wrong to draw such a strong distinction between his abilities and successes and what he expected mine to be. But at 15, I couldn’t think of anything to say.
When I retired, I told my son I wanted to learn to weld. He gave me a helmet. One of these months I’ll swing over to the community college and sign up for Welding 1. And I’ll think of my father when I do.
Again, a great piece.
Thank you. Sons want to turn out like their dads, and dads want their sons to reach a higher level of achievement. At least that’s how it supposed to work, I think.
Your dad sounds awesome and I bet he would be proud to see you learn to weld. Good luck!
Richard,
I cried throughout this whole homage to your dad.
Even if you’re sure he’ll read it, send him a copy.
Trust me on this.
OK. I will.
Richard, it’s original and lovely you chose the photo/words as an homage to fatherhood. Your father sounds like a very giving person and yes, he must read it. You should print it out for him.
“nothing to do and everything to do” simple, powerful line.
Thank you. And I did email him the link. Here he’ll be able to read the comments as well as the essay.
Brilliant writing!
My dad was a trucker in the summer months during my youth. I spent at least six weeks every summer with my father on the truck. I read while he drove. We even stopped somewhere in AZ and watched Fritz The Cat unfurl his cartoon antics. I love my griddy country youth.
Thanks for the great read Sir.
Driving with your dad as a trucker…that’s cool!
Thank you, Sheree.
Congratulations to the elder Cox for a job well done on the younger Cox.
Congratulations to him for many things.
I’m a terrible shot! I was wondering if all writers were just that way, but it sounds like you’d be quite good, just not as good as your dad, maybe?
I’m out of practice. I’m terrible, too. I should hone my skills on clay pigeons next time before I go.
I was thinking about writing my 1000 words about my father, but undoubtedly, yours is better. This was lovely.
Thank you, Marni. But after reading your work I’m sure your piece would have been lovely as well.
This was lovely, Richard.
Well stated. Great tribute to a great man.
Damn it, Richard. You made my eyes all watery.
Your dad sounds like a wonderful father. I thought this was touching and very eloquently written. xoxo.